75
75
Aug 1, 2011
08/11
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 75
favorite 0
quote 0
reporting for npr. especially when i was on fox opinion shows. i said, i will do whatever you want. i am a big fan of npr. i value them. they have a massive audience. the audience was mostly hugely supportive of me. i would ask me to come out and visit and attract audiences and to make people contribute. i wanted to be there. she made it very difficult. she pushed me off the staff and made the relationship based on a contract. immediately, she began cutting my salary and a diminishing my role. >> we have not seen her in this process. she is not. on any program. she lost her job after she had fired you. >> that is right. i do not know the details. npr hired an outside law firm to look into this and see what had taken place. she said it was illegal. apparently, there was some back and forth about who is authorized to do what. this letter to leave. >> she is welcome any time. we found this video from may 18, 2010. it was a talk she gave to a canadian journalist. >> [inaudible] the npr audience1/3 is libera
reporting for npr. especially when i was on fox opinion shows. i said, i will do whatever you want. i am a big fan of npr. i value them. they have a massive audience. the audience was mostly hugely supportive of me. i would ask me to come out and visit and attract audiences and to make people contribute. i wanted to be there. she made it very difficult. she pushed me off the staff and made the relationship based on a contract. immediately, she began cutting my salary and a diminishing my role....
93
93
Aug 1, 2011
08/11
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 93
favorite 0
quote 0
it was ok with npr. it was ok with the "washington post." >> when was the first moment that you crossed words? >> she was the executive producer of the afternoon news show. "all things considered." i never worked for them. occasionally, pieces would be taken from the work i was doing. i never had much professional interaction. i never had lunch with her. when she became the top news executive in the middle of some changes, and she picked up this baton of criticism of why are you working for fox. previous generations have been through this issue. there were some people who said why is the leading personality for npr also working for fox? everyone had come to the conclusion, there's no problem with it. they might come to npr as a result of seeing me engaged with some of the strong personalities on fox. subsequently, there is argument about why do you write for the "new york times?" i said i was a writer. that is how i came into this business. she said, "we want to approve what you write." i said, "i am not
it was ok with npr. it was ok with the "washington post." >> when was the first moment that you crossed words? >> she was the executive producer of the afternoon news show. "all things considered." i never worked for them. occasionally, pieces would be taken from the work i was doing. i never had much professional interaction. i never had lunch with her. when she became the top news executive in the middle of some changes, and she picked up this baton of...
132
132
Mar 9, 2011
03/11
by
MSNBC
tv
eye 132
favorite 0
quote 0
he questions npr's reliance on federal funding. he apparently thought he was having lunch with potential donor who's represented themselves as members of a muslim organization. his resignation was announced yesterday. he is no relation to vivian shiller. the video was released by activist james o'keefe. >>> rural pennsylvania, firefighters are working there to find out what caused a fire that killed seven children that happened last night as the mom was milking cows nearby and their father napping in his delivery truck. a 3-year-old girl did manage to escape alive. >>> today president obama is meeting with secretary of state hillary clinton to discuss the proposal for a no-fly zone over libya. in libya oil reserves in ross la are on fire today. the battle shows gadhafi forces are closer to the city than previously thought. >>> we turn to rio and carnival. giselle bun chen stole the show dancing on a parade float. she can barely samba. if we hear the music, you can see she's got the moves owl in sync. looking good there as she goes
he questions npr's reliance on federal funding. he apparently thought he was having lunch with potential donor who's represented themselves as members of a muslim organization. his resignation was announced yesterday. he is no relation to vivian shiller. the video was released by activist james o'keefe. >>> rural pennsylvania, firefighters are working there to find out what caused a fire that killed seven children that happened last night as the mom was milking cows nearby and their...
119
119
May 27, 2011
05/11
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 119
favorite 0
quote 0
williams at npr. incomes my calling from associated press on the print side, michelle, and she is president and the national association of hispanic journalists and a member of the national press club as well. congratulations to rafael williams, the son of our guest speaker, gist having graduated from haverford. [applause] that is fine. we can allow one round of applause. [laughter] [applause] well-deserved. we have an independent freelance journalist. she has formally worked for npr. then we had the devoted wife of our guest speaker today. skipping over the podium, bob is the senior press secretary for the natural resources defense council, and use the speaker's committee member who organize today's luncheon. first time out, great job. skipping over our speaker, greg, bloomberg news. he is chair of our npc diversity committee. he and i work together in buffalo, new york, many years ago and we're both sworn to secrecy about that. speaking of which, my colleague from the ap broadcast, in a member of th
williams at npr. incomes my calling from associated press on the print side, michelle, and she is president and the national association of hispanic journalists and a member of the national press club as well. congratulations to rafael williams, the son of our guest speaker, gist having graduated from haverford. [applause] that is fine. we can allow one round of applause. [laughter] [applause] well-deserved. we have an independent freelance journalist. she has formally worked for npr. then we...
169
169
Jan 12, 2011
01/11
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 169
favorite 0
quote 0
but npr which is reputed to be the finest radio news operation in existence in the united states, npr last saturday when congresswoman giffords was shot went on the air an hour or so after the bulletins first ran saying that she was dead. what was that based on? it was based on reports npr said. what reports? where did they come from? there were reports on the internet, on blogs, two particularly, which said that she was dead. so when npr went on the air, what did it say? it didn't say she was dead flat out. it said there are reports that she is dead. now, in and of itself that sentence is accurate. there are reports that she is dead. but she's not dead. so what's going on here? what's going on is that npr was sucked in to the modern world of communications where so much information is out there in the ether that it requires a very good editor or producer or reporter to go through all of the chaff and to find something that is accurate. how is it accurate? how can you be comfortable going on the air unless you yourself as a reporter has checked it? and that is where we begin as a medi
but npr which is reputed to be the finest radio news operation in existence in the united states, npr last saturday when congresswoman giffords was shot went on the air an hour or so after the bulletins first ran saying that she was dead. what was that based on? it was based on reports npr said. what reports? where did they come from? there were reports on the internet, on blogs, two particularly, which said that she was dead. so when npr went on the air, what did it say? it didn't say she was...
246
246
Mar 17, 2011
03/11
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 246
favorite 0
quote 0
npr was a shining light above that. npr was pacifica. they were yelling even louder, these were lies, these were lies. if they take this media away from us, we're doomed to be controlled by the same people who brought us adolf hitler and his gang. host: the u.s. house votes today on whether to end funding for npr. what do you think? caller: taxpayers would be better served if we donated the money to c-span. they come the closest, in my opinion, for being unbiased. people can listen to you all and make up our own minds. host: fond du lac, wisconsin. we do not take taxpayer money here, for the record. caller: i will make the short and sweet. 1 1/2 minutes. unlike other callers, i like to listen to all media. npr is one of the great ones. they have some great entertainment. one thing i recall -- all media back in 1995 -- bill clinton gave china most favored nation status, opening the door to all of our businesses going over there. bush had nothing to do with losing our jobs. i have heard that on npr, fox, all the others. i say give them as
npr was a shining light above that. npr was pacifica. they were yelling even louder, these were lies, these were lies. if they take this media away from us, we're doomed to be controlled by the same people who brought us adolf hitler and his gang. host: the u.s. house votes today on whether to end funding for npr. what do you think? caller: taxpayers would be better served if we donated the money to c-span. they come the closest, in my opinion, for being unbiased. people can listen to you all...
251
251
Jul 15, 2011
07/11
by
KGO
tv
eye 251
favorite 0
quote 0
thanks to npr we know about loads of unused spare change piling up as the nation stares down its debt. abc's jon karl explains. >> reporter: we took a journey to the u.s. mint in philadelphia for a lesson in how the government is losing money by making money. this is the presidential dollar coin. congress ordered the mint to make millions of them to honor every dead president but nobody seems to want them. they cost 32 cents a pop to make. the mint makes nearly 2 million of them every day. do the math. about 600,000 dollars a day to make them. because almost nobody uses these things, most go directly into storage. we found a bunch of them 100 miles down the road in a vault. here at the federal reserve in baltimore, the coins are packed into plastic bags stacked one on top of each other all the way up and down this aisle several aisles of them, millions and millions of dollars in presidential coins. federal reserve says they are piling up so quickly they are spending $650,000 to build a new vault in dallas to hold them. shipping the coins there will cost another $3 million. senator jac
thanks to npr we know about loads of unused spare change piling up as the nation stares down its debt. abc's jon karl explains. >> reporter: we took a journey to the u.s. mint in philadelphia for a lesson in how the government is losing money by making money. this is the presidential dollar coin. congress ordered the mint to make millions of them to honor every dead president but nobody seems to want them. they cost 32 cents a pop to make. the mint makes nearly 2 million of them every...
223
223
Nov 24, 2011
11/11
by
KCSM
tv
eye 223
favorite 0
quote 0
bill was formally at npr and american public media. so welcome to you both. >> thanks. >> let's start with the question at hand. just how serious is the crisis afflicting investigative journalism? bob? >> we're in a convulsion because the newspaper business specifically, but all media, i mean, to be candid, they aren't making money, and so the business model is dying or dead, and if we can't make money, no one's gonna pay our salary, no one is gonna have the courage to actually broadcast or report what we find out. so we can write letters, or we can go on the internet, but as this kind of collective in-depth investigative work that the "new york times" or the "washington post" or npr or some of the networks are doing, there won't be money to support it. >> bill, he uses the world "convulsion." that's a big word. >> investigative reporting is risky, it's time-consuming, it takes a lot of resources to do it and to do it really well and then stand behind it in case you get sued, et cetera. i think it is in crisis, and i think the real rea
bill was formally at npr and american public media. so welcome to you both. >> thanks. >> let's start with the question at hand. just how serious is the crisis afflicting investigative journalism? bob? >> we're in a convulsion because the newspaper business specifically, but all media, i mean, to be candid, they aren't making money, and so the business model is dying or dead, and if we can't make money, no one's gonna pay our salary, no one is gonna have the courage to...
209
209
tv
eye 209
favorite 0
quote 0
critics have long showed npr as slanting liberal. last year they took a grant of more than a million dollars from george soros, the billionaire who supported left-leaning causes and for firing williams after he confessed on fox news that he's uncomfortable when he sees muslim garbed passengers on a plane. the bill passed last month would eliminate funding for public broadcasting by 2013. >> npr is part of the public broadcasting establishment that is attempting to preserve the relatively small amount that it gets for the federal government. it doesn't need another pr headache like this. >> for o'keefe, npr is not his first target. past undercover sting videos of his embarrassed liberal groups like planned parenthood and acorn. he's accused of editing out parts of his interviews. but he says the unedited video is posted on his website. he pleaded guilty last year after being caught trying to access the phone system of democratic senator mary landrieu. last summer he tried to embarrass a former cnn correspondent on a boat set up with s
critics have long showed npr as slanting liberal. last year they took a grant of more than a million dollars from george soros, the billionaire who supported left-leaning causes and for firing williams after he confessed on fox news that he's uncomfortable when he sees muslim garbed passengers on a plane. the bill passed last month would eliminate funding for public broadcasting by 2013. >> npr is part of the public broadcasting establishment that is attempting to preserve the relatively...
113
113
Aug 11, 2011
08/11
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 113
favorite 0
quote 0
it is similar to the npr policy. we cribbed our common policy from npr and it worked out pretty well. there have not been problems. >> i wanted to see whether this project is being used by the traditional media locally. if i was a reporter watching this in the "boston globe" newsroom, how could i find out more about this? what is the title of the case? who are the lawyers? is there anything on the site that would do that? >> it is an interesting question. when we were planning this, we thought the lowest hanging fruit would be to post the docket, what each case was. we have not been able to crack the state court data base to provide something that is usable. there is a lot of sensitivity about posting the names of those accused. they are accused. as we all know, nothing this appears on the web. if someone was wrongly accused of x and he applies for a job as a national journal and day maybe he would not get that job. it has not been fully resolved. it is an incredibly blunt instrument right now. there is no tagging th
it is similar to the npr policy. we cribbed our common policy from npr and it worked out pretty well. there have not been problems. >> i wanted to see whether this project is being used by the traditional media locally. if i was a reporter watching this in the "boston globe" newsroom, how could i find out more about this? what is the title of the case? who are the lawyers? is there anything on the site that would do that? >> it is an interesting question. when we were...
137
137
Aug 9, 2011
08/11
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 137
favorite 0
quote 0
explaining npr to the listeners, the listeners to npr. i came to learn that what we have is a very fractured media. people listen, read, watch the their own personal beliefs. so what they see as biased is that you are not on my side. you're not advocating for me. and that is not paroled the news media. i think it is a speech is complete. -- specious complaint. i got to complaints about a story. once said that it was national palestinian radio and the other said it was about pays for the israeli military. >> that is a diversity news media. a lot of people agree with the bias, you did not come out on my side. and what we have had with the rise of cable and the internet, and fox news takes a lot of the credit and blame for this, a sizable number of people only go to news outlets that preach to the choir, they reinforce their views. you have people who go to fox in drudge websites. now we've had it: on the left with msnbc, which was going nowhere for most of its existence, and found its niche as a last alternative. urginglerf -- left alternat
explaining npr to the listeners, the listeners to npr. i came to learn that what we have is a very fractured media. people listen, read, watch the their own personal beliefs. so what they see as biased is that you are not on my side. you're not advocating for me. and that is not paroled the news media. i think it is a speech is complete. -- specious complaint. i got to complaints about a story. once said that it was national palestinian radio and the other said it was about pays for the israeli...
188
188
tv
eye 188
favorite 0
quote 0
npr's diane rehm joins john to talk about that hidden camera scandal rocking npr right now. and charlie sheen says he's winning. guess what, all we see is a lot of smoking. jeanne moos is next. >> it's radical and the people are doing exactly what they should be doing. i do. ooh! now who wants some free stuff? [ all ] me! snapple. the best diet stuff on earth. of smoking. [ male announcer ] provocative. ♪ unexpected. ♪ defiant. ♪ and just what you need to forge your own path. introducing the most fuel-efficient luxury car available. the radically new... 42 mile per gallon ct hybrid from lexus. ♪ by giving me huge discounts on rooms hotels can't always fill. with unpublished rates. which means i get an even more rockin' hotel, for less. where you book matters. expedia. >>> charlie sheen says he's winning, winning. i don't know if that's true but i know he's smoking, smoking. >> reporter: no one would ever accuse party boy charlie sheen of being a drag. >> facial or -- >> reporter: but he's been doing nothing but dragging on butts, exhaling, streams of smoke. >> hi ya
npr's diane rehm joins john to talk about that hidden camera scandal rocking npr right now. and charlie sheen says he's winning. guess what, all we see is a lot of smoking. jeanne moos is next. >> it's radical and the people are doing exactly what they should be doing. i do. ooh! now who wants some free stuff? [ all ] me! snapple. the best diet stuff on earth. of smoking. [ male announcer ] provocative. ♪ unexpected. ♪ defiant. ♪ and just what you need to forge your own path....
250
250
tv
eye 250
favorite 0
quote 0
why npr? >> my colleague shawn adelaide who posed as one of the members of the muslim brotherhood was pretty offended with what happened with juan williams. he suggested looking into npr after that incident back in the fall. my other colleague, simon templar, came up with the idea to have a sort of muslim angle since juan williams was fired due to his comments. >> reporter: i spoke with npr president and ceo vivian schiller, who's not related to ron schiller, over the phone. >> the comments made by ron schiller are an affront to this organization and are contrary to everything we stand for, as a news organization. we stand for diversity of opinion and tolerance and open-mindedness. and i -- his comments did not reflect those values. >> reporter: as head of the npr fund raising arm, ron schiller is not involved in npr's news operations and his views are not aired on npr. schiller announced last week he was leaving npr for a new job. he didn't flinch when he said jews control the media. npr said
why npr? >> my colleague shawn adelaide who posed as one of the members of the muslim brotherhood was pretty offended with what happened with juan williams. he suggested looking into npr after that incident back in the fall. my other colleague, simon templar, came up with the idea to have a sort of muslim angle since juan williams was fired due to his comments. >> reporter: i spoke with npr president and ceo vivian schiller, who's not related to ron schiller, over the phone....
211
211
May 28, 2011
05/11
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 211
favorite 0
quote 0
npr said his remarks were inconsistent with standards and practices but npr's review of how that was handled itself revealed problems. clearly he has moved on from that and just might be doing better than ever. along with daily journalism he is the author of best selling books about the civil roots icons such as thurgood marshall his next book due out in july is called muzzled, the assault on honest debate. two months ago we had the woman who ran npr, vivian schiller, at this very podium to discuss that, among other things just between -- rather just before she, too, was let go. since then our guest has taken on an expanded role at fox news, serving as a political analyst, panelist and regular substitute host on the o'reilly factor. please give a warm national press club welcome to juan williams. [applause] >> mark, thank you very much. bob, thank you for setting this up on your maiden voyage. i hope i hold to your high standards. thank you. it's a pleasure for me to be here at the national press club and i want to thank you all for coming out today and of course i want to thank you,
npr said his remarks were inconsistent with standards and practices but npr's review of how that was handled itself revealed problems. clearly he has moved on from that and just might be doing better than ever. along with daily journalism he is the author of best selling books about the civil roots icons such as thurgood marshall his next book due out in july is called muzzled, the assault on honest debate. two months ago we had the woman who ran npr, vivian schiller, at this very podium to...
140
140
Apr 16, 2011
04/11
by
FOXNEWS
tv
eye 140
favorite 0
quote 0
if npr . national public radio is so special and better than anybody else which they would be the first to say, why don't they find a place for themselves in the market place and support for them in the capitolist system and instead of relying on a government hand out and that said it all i think. >> absolutely. >> pardon me. >> it does say it all. thank you very much, liz. soon to be princess kate middleton. is causing problems for one woman. it is causing a mix up. ♪ it ain't me, babe. whereo go for a quiet get away. [ male announcer ] thanks to the orbitz matrix display, you can make more knledgeable decisions when booking vation packages. ♪ see all your hotel and flight options and savings for the ideal vacation. perfect. [ male announcer ] when you orbitz, you know. but i've learned lot from patients who use flexpen. flexpen comes pre-filled with the insulin i take i live my life on the go and need an on-the-go insulin. i don't need to carry a cooler with flexpen. novolog is a fast-ac
if npr . national public radio is so special and better than anybody else which they would be the first to say, why don't they find a place for themselves in the market place and support for them in the capitolist system and instead of relying on a government hand out and that said it all i think. >> absolutely. >> pardon me. >> it does say it all. thank you very much, liz. soon to be princess kate middleton. is causing problems for one woman. it is causing a mix up. ♪ it...
216
216
tv
eye 216
favorite 0
quote 0
but npr said they rejected a check they offered. last year, npr was criticized by conservatives for taking a grant of more than $1 million from george sorros. and for firing analyst juan williams after he confessed on fox news that he's uncomfortable when he sees muslim-garbed passengers on the plane. it would eliminate funding the corporation for public broadcasting by 2013. for o'keeffe, npr is not his first target. past undercover sting videos of his. he's accused of creatively editing out part of his sting interviews. but o'keeffe says the unedited npr video is posted on his website. o'keeffe pleaded guilty last year after being caught trying to access the phone system of mary landrieu. last summer, he even tried to embarrass a former cnn correspondent on a boat set up with sex toys and hidden cameras according to a 13-page planning document. a former o'keeffe associate warned cnn at the last minute. >> cnn did obtain this statement from shiller late last night saying "while the meeting i participated in turned out to be a ruse,
but npr said they rejected a check they offered. last year, npr was criticized by conservatives for taking a grant of more than $1 million from george sorros. and for firing analyst juan williams after he confessed on fox news that he's uncomfortable when he sees muslim-garbed passengers on the plane. it would eliminate funding the corporation for public broadcasting by 2013. for o'keeffe, npr is not his first target. past undercover sting videos of his. he's accused of creatively editing out...
178
178
Mar 18, 2011
03/11
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 178
favorite 0
quote 1
npr should do the same. with the national debt over $13 trillion the government should not continue to fund n nonessential services. host: nonessential services being funded in the case of public broadcasting. guest: you have to put it in context. the services we provide are 1/10,000th of 1% of the federal budget. you could him fate all of public public pwrabroadcasting 1,000 t and not affect the deficit. this is not about money. there are much bigger pots of money the congress could identify that would be more availing to them of satisfying their budget challenge. the issue, i think, is to say what should public pwrabroadcas be doing and how it should change going forward? we have been in business 40 years and the american people appreciate it and we have by overwhelming margins been confirmed as the best use of taxpayer dollars second only to national defense. but it is obviously a matter in which we can always be improving our product and we would be happy to with the congress, f.c.c. and administration o
npr should do the same. with the national debt over $13 trillion the government should not continue to fund n nonessential services. host: nonessential services being funded in the case of public broadcasting. guest: you have to put it in context. the services we provide are 1/10,000th of 1% of the federal budget. you could him fate all of public public pwrabroadcasting 1,000 t and not affect the deficit. this is not about money. there are much bigger pots of money the congress could identify...
238
238
Mar 10, 2011
03/11
by
MSNBC
tv
eye 238
favorite 0
quote 0
this time the target was npr. he captured an npr fund-raiser making disparaging remarks about republicans and the tea party. >> white middle-america, gun-toting racists. that's scary. they're seriously racist, racist people. >> reporter: this time, this cost the fund-raiser and ceo their jobs. the timing could not be worse. the house voted to stop all funding of public broadcasting, $430 million this year. >> what kind of mission does the corporation for public broadcasting serve in these very tough economic times? >> reporter: npr says it gets only 2% of its budge fret taxpayers. most of the federal money, 71%, goes to local public tv and radio stations. losing that would hurt. >> i think we would survive without the money. would we do as good a job as we do now? >> absolutely not. >> reporter: officials say some stations would go under. also at risk programming like "sesame street." >> we have studies that prove our programs get these children ready for school, ready to learn. >> reporter: with american children
this time the target was npr. he captured an npr fund-raiser making disparaging remarks about republicans and the tea party. >> white middle-america, gun-toting racists. that's scary. they're seriously racist, racist people. >> reporter: this time, this cost the fund-raiser and ceo their jobs. the timing could not be worse. the house voted to stop all funding of public broadcasting, $430 million this year. >> what kind of mission does the corporation for public broadcasting...
142
142
Apr 22, 2011
04/11
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 142
favorite 0
quote 0
i have a long history with npr, some of the editorial. i do agree with that. >> does anyone want to comment? >> hoop cares if they are liberal? ares if they are liberal? even though it is an infinitesimal amount of money, the overarching issue we find ourselves, what are our tax dollars going for? i listened to npr all the time, but i don't like paying for it. >> i fully understand that, and when you see the devotion -- talk about anudience that is absolutely devoted, i knowhat the npr audience is willing to pay for it, to keep their local stations going. that is legitimate, and what they should do. >> some of this is in the eye of the beholder. i know mary will see the media as being more liberal than i see it. i see it being more established and down the middle. i would rather have a thought about why we have to define the world in that way. most smart people i know are not listening to nancy pelosi for their world view, nor to john boehner. most cannot go home at night talking about continuing resolutions to fund the united states gove
i have a long history with npr, some of the editorial. i do agree with that. >> does anyone want to comment? >> hoop cares if they are liberal? ares if they are liberal? even though it is an infinitesimal amount of money, the overarching issue we find ourselves, what are our tax dollars going for? i listened to npr all the time, but i don't like paying for it. >> i fully understand that, and when you see the devotion -- talk about anudience that is absolutely devoted, i...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
260
260
Apr 22, 2011
04/11
by
SFGTV2
tv
eye 260
favorite 0
quote 0
i will probably and more out reached npr from the bay area. mayor lee: if i'm smiling, it's because we literally were giving some valuable tips. some of the mayors were asking if it would be polite to hug. you can shake the hand and balance a little bit, but you do not -- it is that kind of tips that allow mayors to be more successful, and they wanted to see whether or not we were organizing a bay area tret -- triop. >> -- trip. >> you referred to the huge economic boom that could accompany the america's cup. most of the economic buzz has been on your side of the bay. i'm wondering if there is a role in the america's cup for oakland. >> of course. >> you can jump in if you want. >> i was actually going to head up on that later. however, -- >> you are not going to steal that vote out there on the barge. >> we want to be part of fleet week. we understand that the admiral ship cannot talk in san francisco, so we would like to have him in oakland. there is a lot of regional, cultural activities. the two cities are still linked together. we are rea
i will probably and more out reached npr from the bay area. mayor lee: if i'm smiling, it's because we literally were giving some valuable tips. some of the mayors were asking if it would be polite to hug. you can shake the hand and balance a little bit, but you do not -- it is that kind of tips that allow mayors to be more successful, and they wanted to see whether or not we were organizing a bay area tret -- triop. >> -- trip. >> you referred to the huge economic boom that could...
138
138
Apr 6, 2011
04/11
by
MSNBC
tv
eye 138
favorite 0
quote 0
they don't like npr. they don't like the arts being funded. they don't like the fact that women have a choice whether or not to have a child and they're going to use the budget quote/unquote to push their ideology. that's not politically courageous. >> thank you very much. a couple days to debate more on this issue. thank you for stopping by today. >>> more on the threat of a shutdown ahead. we'll have that for you. >>> bunga bunga, the teenager, the premiere, and the trial that has the whole world captivated. ♪ ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] with amazing innovation, driven by relentless competition, wireless puts the world at your command. ♪ [ tires squeal ] an accident doesn't have to slow you down. introducing "better car replacement," available only from liberty mutual insurance. if your car's totaled, we give you the money to buy a car that's one model year newer with 15,000 fewer miles on it. there's no other auto insurance product like it. better car replacement, available only from liberty mutual. it's a better policy that gets you a b
they don't like npr. they don't like the arts being funded. they don't like the fact that women have a choice whether or not to have a child and they're going to use the budget quote/unquote to push their ideology. that's not politically courageous. >> thank you very much. a couple days to debate more on this issue. thank you for stopping by today. >>> more on the threat of a shutdown ahead. we'll have that for you. >>> bunga bunga, the teenager, the premiere, and the...
207
207
tv
eye 207
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> a scandal for npr causing the ceo to resign. after the former senior vice president for fund- raising was caught on hidden camera making statements against the party. he is captured on camera in a sting operation brought in by activists. here is the put it. >> (inaudible) of fish resigning from his job and npr fell with public-relations problems last fall after firing one contributor. teaming after williams said on fox news said bill lewis of flying with people who were muslim clothing. smart phones are normally used to help make your life easier but that could be causing women even more stress. women received frequent work contacted holmes cell phones e-mail and other devices or more distressed reported symptoms of anxiety and stress researchers say the deal to taking time away from the kids while at home cause psychological problems for women more than men. . >> a dna test determining if your child has the potential to be a star athlete. it made up of two squads to scrape the inside of the cheek. it is related to strength spee
. >> a scandal for npr causing the ceo to resign. after the former senior vice president for fund- raising was caught on hidden camera making statements against the party. he is captured on camera in a sting operation brought in by activists. here is the put it. >> (inaudible) of fish resigning from his job and npr fell with public-relations problems last fall after firing one contributor. teaming after williams said on fox news said bill lewis of flying with people who were muslim...
224
224
Mar 10, 2011
03/11
by
WTTG
tv
eye 224
favorite 0
quote 0
. >>> the president an ceo at npr is now out a job in the wake of scathing comments by another former executive. vivian schiller's resignation is an effort to limit the damage from a video that hit the web this week. >> basically they are -- they believe in white middle america gun toting and it is just scary. >> that is ron schiller who is the president of npr foundation until last week. he was captured on hidden camera describing members of the tea party movement as racist to a fellow npr exec and two men from a muslim organization during a lunch in georgetown. the video was posted on a web site run by conservative activist james o'keefe. >>> six buck for a bucket of popcorn not to mention the overall ticket costs. are movie theater prices out of control? yes. >> and could the dollar bill soon be a thing of the past. business beat is coming up on fox 5 morning news. >>> in honor of its 40th birthday, starbucks is rolling out a new logo and launching starbucks petites. can you can get free samples of the microsized desserts. all you have to do is buy something to drink. d >>
. >>> the president an ceo at npr is now out a job in the wake of scathing comments by another former executive. vivian schiller's resignation is an effort to limit the damage from a video that hit the web this week. >> basically they are -- they believe in white middle america gun toting and it is just scary. >> that is ron schiller who is the president of npr foundation until last week. he was captured on hidden camera describing members of the tea party movement as...
184
184
tv
eye 184
favorite 0
quote 0
in october, npr said it fire williams for violating its standards after a comment he made on fox news. williams said heets nervous when he sees peoplin muslim attire on a plane. he was then hired by fox ws. >>> a tennessee woman may need pltic surgery after she was hit in the face with a jar of quesat walmart. it was all caught on tape. a n threw a jar of cese dip trying to hit an employee who told himo leave the stor he missed, though, and hit that customer square in the face breaking her nose. the mans still on the loose. he is wanted for aggravad assault and reckls endangernt. >> i hope they catch him. yeah. that woman is going to have some painful, painful days ahead of her. too bad for her. >> indeed. >> washington redskins tight end fred davis is denying allegations that he assaulted woma d.c. pice are investigating the incident which took place at the sephine nightclub in northwestashington. davis said a woman threw arink on him and he retaliated by throwing orange juice her. she told police he ao hit her. he said club sveillance will prove he did not. no charges have be filed.
in october, npr said it fire williams for violating its standards after a comment he made on fox news. williams said heets nervous when he sees peoplin muslim attire on a plane. he was then hired by fox ws. >>> a tennessee woman may need pltic surgery after she was hit in the face with a jar of quesat walmart. it was all caught on tape. a n threw a jar of cese dip trying to hit an employee who told himo leave the stor he missed, though, and hit that customer square in the face breaking...
116
116
Apr 30, 2011
04/11
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 116
favorite 0
quote 0
i know i'm going to be on an npr affiliate next friday in response to this boston radio call, and it's going to be a lion's den, for sure, because they're going to want to single me out as the enemy. so i don't know. i know that, certainly, phyllis has been more involved on, in terms of college, the college environment because she's given a lot of speeches there. for me at 43 i'm just sort of starting out on that area, so i don't know what's going to happen. i'm concerned, and that's why i said when i stood up when i see all these young ladies' faces and it's just so wonderful because, again, that's the group that i'm trying to reach. >> well, i think the colleges have been infected in nearly all the departments. if you want to be safe, take engineering. but don't waste your education dollar on women's studies. they, they are absolutely the worst. and it's just a lot of feminist/lesbian propaganda. >> and it goes back decades. my husband would get lower grades from these feminist professors, and this is in the early '90s because -- '80s because he would argue -- yeah, argue with or tak
i know i'm going to be on an npr affiliate next friday in response to this boston radio call, and it's going to be a lion's den, for sure, because they're going to want to single me out as the enemy. so i don't know. i know that, certainly, phyllis has been more involved on, in terms of college, the college environment because she's given a lot of speeches there. for me at 43 i'm just sort of starting out on that area, so i don't know what's going to happen. i'm concerned, and that's why i said...
202
202
Mar 9, 2011
03/11
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 202
favorite 0
quote 0
there is a lot in npr. i really do think with government funding gone, it opens them up to the ability to raise more from the private sector. i voted on the amendment to defund npr, but i also wrote a check for $500 to my local npr station. if it is public broadcasting, it should be voluntary supported by the public and not mandatory by the taxpayers. host: deductions for home mortgages. guest: home mortgages is important than the u.s. and i would hate to see that the way. i actually think home on a ship is a good thing. i do think we have gone too far on that on programs that require banks to loan money to people who could not repay them. but i do think making homes more affordable through interest deduction is reasonable. of course, if you go to where most -- a good chunk of -- i would say most of the freshmen, including myself, will want to go, to either a flat tax or fair tax, it becomes moot. there would not be the level of deductions we have now. our current tax system is so complicated because we are
there is a lot in npr. i really do think with government funding gone, it opens them up to the ability to raise more from the private sector. i voted on the amendment to defund npr, but i also wrote a check for $500 to my local npr station. if it is public broadcasting, it should be voluntary supported by the public and not mandatory by the taxpayers. host: deductions for home mortgages. guest: home mortgages is important than the u.s. and i would hate to see that the way. i actually think home...
322
322
tv
eye 322
favorite 0
quote 2
for public broadcasting, npr. >> zero now, right? >> maybe 15. >> reporter: most folks think public broadcasting gets 5% of the federal budget. reality -- less than .1 of 1%. overall, americans believe foreign aid, government pensions, education, food and housing assistance and public broadcasting account for 52% of the federal budget. in reality, it is just 11.3% of the budget. the bulk of our spending goes to defense, social security, medicare and medicaid. >> we have very skewed perspectives. >> reporter: why do you think that is? >> probably the media. >> reporter: we in the media can take some of the blame but also the politicians who are making a small part of the budget a huge part of the budget fight. they're not talking about or touching the biggest challenges. social security, medicare and medicaid. jessica yellin, cnn, washington. >>> it's funny. jessica should mention social security, medicare and medicaid because if you want to know where your taxpayer dollars are going, this is a graphic from the white house. you can go
for public broadcasting, npr. >> zero now, right? >> maybe 15. >> reporter: most folks think public broadcasting gets 5% of the federal budget. reality -- less than .1 of 1%. overall, americans believe foreign aid, government pensions, education, food and housing assistance and public broadcasting account for 52% of the federal budget. in reality, it is just 11.3% of the budget. the bulk of our spending goes to defense, social security, medicare and medicaid. >> we have...
222
222
tv
eye 222
favorite 0
quote 0
in october, npr said ifired williams for violang its standards after a comment he made ofox news. williams saide gets nervous wh he sees peoe in muslim attire on an airplane williams went on to accept a laer role at fox. >>> the winter weather could cause a mess out the. overnight crews treated the roads to prepare for this morning's snowy cute. traysee, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. i ink we made it through oka without that mess. is is geoia and university as you can see, the snow has stopd. what we're left with is basically a wet roadway. thesroads were treated overnight. everything tt hit the ground pretty much melted even though we're dealinwith freezing temperatures. we had snow coming down really hard, butt left bary a dusting here. and as i said we were prepared for this. some pretty much the main roadways are looking gat in our area. let me show you what it looks like in another part of maryland. they have a little more snow than what we saw here in wheaton. morehan a dusting down there. you can see how it'sooking on some of the sid roads there. a little more di
in october, npr said ifired williams for violang its standards after a comment he made ofox news. williams saide gets nervous wh he sees peoe in muslim attire on an airplane williams went on to accept a laer role at fox. >>> the winter weather could cause a mess out the. overnight crews treated the roads to prepare for this morning's snowy cute. traysee, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. i ink we made it through oka without that mess. is is geoia and university as you can...
182
182
Mar 9, 2011
03/11
by
WTTG
tv
eye 182
favorite 0
quote 0
shiller was slated to leave his position as president of the npr position in may. he is on administrative leave. >>> 30 years ago, this month, surgeons at george washington university hospital ended up saving the life of a leader of the free world. a gunman shot president ronald reagan in the chest. and his condition, on arrival, so dire, doctors thought they might lose him. the minute by minute account of the trauma team in action is included in a new book. it is called rawhide down. it is a play on the president's secret service code name. and paul wagner has more from the doctor who headed up the team. >> it took just three to four sections after john hinckley started firing his gun for secret service agents to shove president rage noon the armored limb armored limousine and bore off to the white house. the president initially looked okay but jerry par the presidential detail head, began examining reagan. >> we were moving pretty fast. and 30 seconds into the run, he started spitting up bright red frothy blood. >> and he made a split sec decision to turn right a
shiller was slated to leave his position as president of the npr position in may. he is on administrative leave. >>> 30 years ago, this month, surgeons at george washington university hospital ended up saving the life of a leader of the free world. a gunman shot president ronald reagan in the chest. and his condition, on arrival, so dire, doctors thought they might lose him. the minute by minute account of the trauma team in action is included in a new book. it is called rawhide down....
198
198
Jul 14, 2011
07/11
by
WJLA
tv
eye 198
favorite 0
quote 0
we first heard about this on npr, and had no idea it was going on. here's abc's jon karl. >> reporter: we took a journey to the heart of the u.s. mint in philadelphia. down long corridors, into oversized elevators and through doors, lots of doors, for a lesson on how to lose money while making money. it sounds a little like vegas around here, except the coins never stop coming. this is the presidential dollar coin. they're making them to honor every dead president, but nobody seems to want them. not even the one for rutherford b. hayes. rutherford b. hayes, hot off the press. literally, these coins are still warm. made of manganese brass, they coco 32 cents a pop to make. the mint can make 1.8 million a day. do the math. that's nearly $600,000 a day. because almost nobody uses these things, most go directly into storage. we found a bunch of them 100 miles down the road in a vault. here at the federal reserve in baltimore, the coins are packed into plastic bags stacked one on top of each other all the way up and down this aisle. several aisle of them,
we first heard about this on npr, and had no idea it was going on. here's abc's jon karl. >> reporter: we took a journey to the heart of the u.s. mint in philadelphia. down long corridors, into oversized elevators and through doors, lots of doors, for a lesson on how to lose money while making money. it sounds a little like vegas around here, except the coins never stop coming. this is the presidential dollar coin. they're making them to honor every dead president, but nobody seems to...
94
94
Dec 9, 2011
12/11
by
MSNBC
tv
eye 94
favorite 0
quote 0
npr, when in search of the millionaire job creators that they are protecting, these gops keep talking about, we've got to protect the job creators. well, npr requested help from numerous republican on gregs nal offices including house and senate leadership and they were unable to produce a single millionaire job creator for us to interview. it's amazing. when you call a heb on it, they can't come through. >> well, i think the republican motto right now is anybody but the middle class, anybody but working families. that's who they will protect. we saw it this week with the vote on the person that we wanted to head the consumer protection bureau. stand up for consumers in this country so they don't get ripped off. and they voted no. they are against the unemployment insurance maintaining the benefits level until we get this economy to defer and get back to work. they have a problem with continuing the payroll tax cut but when we talk about tax cuts to millionaires and billionaires, they have no problem as it relates to those customers and they don't seek for those to be paid for. so it'
npr, when in search of the millionaire job creators that they are protecting, these gops keep talking about, we've got to protect the job creators. well, npr requested help from numerous republican on gregs nal offices including house and senate leadership and they were unable to produce a single millionaire job creator for us to interview. it's amazing. when you call a heb on it, they can't come through. >> well, i think the republican motto right now is anybody but the middle class,...
231
231
Dec 7, 2011
12/11
by
WMAR
tv
eye 231
favorite 0
quote 0
one reason they say it's sending kids to emergency rooms according to a story first reported on npr. here's problem. after boil the watt -- boiling the water you pour over the noodle the cups are top heavy and they can spill easily and the result is kids are being left with burns. look at that. they are going to ers. >> it could be up to 5 to 6 patient as week between inpatient and outpatient settings. >> they are working with manufacturers to change the design so the cups are bottom heavy and not nearly as easy to tip over. >>> home owner in california is going to do a lot of repairs for the holidays. how a tv stunt left a family with aton of damage. >>> and also what caused alec baldwin to be kicked off a flight. this guy is always in the news. what he did this time. time for birthdays and ruth celebrating today,yohan wanted to wish you a happy birthday. if you've photograph to send in, birthdays, anniversaries andpets, morning show at wmar.com. back in a bit. >>> the end is putting -- indiana is putting 5 million dollars away to keb say the the estates of 7 people who died and pay
one reason they say it's sending kids to emergency rooms according to a story first reported on npr. here's problem. after boil the watt -- boiling the water you pour over the noodle the cups are top heavy and they can spill easily and the result is kids are being left with burns. look at that. they are going to ers. >> it could be up to 5 to 6 patient as week between inpatient and outpatient settings. >> they are working with manufacturers to change the design so the cups are...
362
362
Apr 8, 2011
04/11
by
MSNBC
tv
eye 362
favorite 0
quote 0
protection agency, the epa, to regulate greenhouse gases as well as one that would strip funding from npr as well as pbs. yesterday, senator chuck schumer of new york blasted republicans' edition of the riders as a mistake. >> it is the ideological riders that have nothing to do with the deficit that are standing in the way. it would be a tragic mistake to force a government shutdown, but doubly tragic if the shutdown were on issues not related to spending. house approved -- excuse me acres government shutdown could have ripples throughout the economy and could furlough 800,000 federal workers, interrupt military pay and slow tax refunds. the house approved a spending measure that would keep the government open through april 15th, tax day, for those keeping at track at home. the measure passed largely along party lines on the condition that it cuts $12 billion in discretionary spending. it would also fund the defense department through september and house republicans pushed to try to frame this as a means to support the troops. >> this bill is not a political tactic. the real fact is that
protection agency, the epa, to regulate greenhouse gases as well as one that would strip funding from npr as well as pbs. yesterday, senator chuck schumer of new york blasted republicans' edition of the riders as a mistake. >> it is the ideological riders that have nothing to do with the deficit that are standing in the way. it would be a tragic mistake to force a government shutdown, but doubly tragic if the shutdown were on issues not related to spending. house approved -- excuse me...
115
115
Oct 23, 2011
10/11
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 115
favorite 0
quote 0
[applause] >> you say you are still an npr fan but you also advocate the funding of npr. let's talk about that. where npr goes from here. >> for me there are two things to say. one is local and the our stations are journalistic jams that we have to protect because they play such an important role. [applause] i used to raise money for that with all my heart. in an era where we have declining local coverage from newspapers and npr stations and talk-show hosts they reflect the community in a way that is rare right now in the media landscape. if you are talking about npr washington, people who i think our self righteous and even limited in their thinking, what is going on here? these people are 1-sided and believe they are the only people who are practicing honest journalism in america. there are going to look down at anybody who is doing anything differently. i find that crazy. the bigger point about defunding is this which i say to you as a fellow journalist. in january of this year or january or february there was a letter from the head of the democratic congressional camp
[applause] >> you say you are still an npr fan but you also advocate the funding of npr. let's talk about that. where npr goes from here. >> for me there are two things to say. one is local and the our stations are journalistic jams that we have to protect because they play such an important role. [applause] i used to raise money for that with all my heart. in an era where we have declining local coverage from newspapers and npr stations and talk-show hosts they reflect the...
183
183
tv
eye 183
favorite 0
quote 0
but an npr spokesman said she couldn't confirm reports that schiller was forced out because of the fallout from an undercover video involving a former fund-raising executive. ron schiller, who is not related to her, apologized and resigned after he was videotaped calling the tea party racist and saying npr would be better off without federal funding. he accepted a position with the aspen institute, but that's not going to happen now because of the controversy. >>> an oregon man convicted of killing his wife and three kids wants to donate his organs after he's executed. but state la is standing in the way. according to oregon law, death row inmates have to be killed by lethal injection. those drugs used make organs impossible to be donated. a corrections department spokesperson told kptv in oregon that longy, the man we're talking about, has exhausted his appeals and can only be executed according to current state law. should death row inmates be allowed to donate their organs after they're executed? join the discussion on my blog cnn.com/ali. go to my twitter pag page @alivelshi. to help r
but an npr spokesman said she couldn't confirm reports that schiller was forced out because of the fallout from an undercover video involving a former fund-raising executive. ron schiller, who is not related to her, apologized and resigned after he was videotaped calling the tea party racist and saying npr would be better off without federal funding. he accepted a position with the aspen institute, but that's not going to happen now because of the controversy. >>> an oregon man...
106
106
Dec 19, 2011
12/11
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 106
favorite 0
quote 0
williams at npr. then comes my colleague from associated press on the print side, michelle, and she is president of the national association of hispanic journalists and member of the national press club as well. congratulations to rafaiel williams the son of our guest speaker just having graduated from haverford. [applause] >> that's fine, we can allow one round of applause. [applause] >> well deserved. tamela bay an independent freelance journalist and she has formerly worked for npr and delease williams, the wife of our guest speaker today. stepping over the podium, bob keith is the senior press club for the national resources defense council and he's the speaker who organized the luncheon first time out great job, bob. greg month, bloomberg news he's chair of the npc diverse community. he and i worked together in buffalo, new york, years ago and we're both sworn to secrecy about that and my colleague from associated press broadcast, a new member of the national press club, lila, she works for assoc
williams at npr. then comes my colleague from associated press on the print side, michelle, and she is president of the national association of hispanic journalists and member of the national press club as well. congratulations to rafaiel williams the son of our guest speaker just having graduated from haverford. [applause] >> that's fine, we can allow one round of applause. [applause] >> well deserved. tamela bay an independent freelance journalist and she has formerly worked for...
129
129
Apr 3, 2011
04/11
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 129
favorite 0
quote 0
i know i'm going to be on the npr affiliate in response to this. boston radio called and it's going to be aligned for sure. they are going to want to single me out as the enemy. so, i don't know, i know that certainly phyllis has been more involved in terms of college, the college environment because she is given a lot of speeches for me. i'm just sort of starting out on that iran guess why don't know what's going to happen. i'm concerned and that's why when i said when i see these young ladies faces and it's just so wonderful because again that's the group i'm trying to reach. >> i think the colleges have been effective in all of the department's but you want to take say engineering, but don't waste your education dollar on the women's studies. they are absolutely the worst, and it's just a lot of feminist lesbian propaganda. >> and it goes back decades. my husband would get lower grades from these feminist professors and this is in the early 80's because he would argue with or take issue with what they were teaching him to provide an alternative
i know i'm going to be on the npr affiliate in response to this. boston radio called and it's going to be aligned for sure. they are going to want to single me out as the enemy. so, i don't know, i know that certainly phyllis has been more involved in terms of college, the college environment because she is given a lot of speeches for me. i'm just sort of starting out on that iran guess why don't know what's going to happen. i'm concerned and that's why when i said when i see these young ladies...
225
225
Jun 7, 2011
06/11
by
FOXNEWS
tv
eye 225
favorite 0
quote 0
you are very, very familiar with the smear machine having gone through with the npr. when is enough enough on the smear machine? >> man, we have got to get away from it i thought and this is why i say it was so important that you heard anthony weiner apologize to andrew breitbart. >> bill: vaguely. >> i thought he did it directly. >> bill: put him through 10 days of hell, juan. come on. >> no, no. that's the point. people were willing to vilify andrew by the bart and go after him in defending anthony weiner and now that's out the door. i think the fact that he directly apologized to breitbart is a big step in that direction and give breitbart any credibility. >> bill: when you let a guy hang for 10 days. again, he says well, i'm sorry now, but he has to be sorry. i'm giving mary katharine the last word, governmental you are right. it's not anthony weiner is going hugely above and beyond. it's an important moment that he almost apologized to breitbart. many of us who use twitter said the as i remember explanation is probably the explanation. the press did not try to ex
you are very, very familiar with the smear machine having gone through with the npr. when is enough enough on the smear machine? >> man, we have got to get away from it i thought and this is why i say it was so important that you heard anthony weiner apologize to andrew breitbart. >> bill: vaguely. >> i thought he did it directly. >> bill: put him through 10 days of hell, juan. come on. >> no, no. that's the point. people were willing to vilify andrew by the bart...
71
71
Aug 8, 2011
08/11
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 71
favorite 0
quote 0
explain npr to the listeners and listeners to npr. i came to learn what we have now is a very fractured media. people really listen, read, watch through their own internal beliefs. and so what they see as bias is you are not on my side. you are not advocates for me. that isn't the role of the news media. so i think it's a specious complaint. within ten minutes once i got a complaint about the same story that had to do with the arab israeli conflict. one was npr is nothing but national palestinian radio. ten minutes later, it's israeli organization. same story, perceived. >> that's a versatile news organization that can be both. >> we've had one interesting things in the last few weeks. it spins off of the bias question. there are a lot of people that agree with lisa, when they talk about bias, they are saying you didn't come out on my wide. what we've had with the rise of cable and the internet, and i think fox news takes a lot of credit or blame for this. the developing where a sizable number of people only go to news outlets that pr
explain npr to the listeners and listeners to npr. i came to learn what we have now is a very fractured media. people really listen, read, watch through their own internal beliefs. and so what they see as bias is you are not on my side. you are not advocates for me. that isn't the role of the news media. so i think it's a specious complaint. within ten minutes once i got a complaint about the same story that had to do with the arab israeli conflict. one was npr is nothing but national...
73
73
Apr 8, 2011
04/11
by
MSNBC
tv
eye 73
favorite 0
quote 0
they're still going after npr and public broadcasting. so this really has nothing to do with the numbers anymore, it's ideological from their side. >> if i could, i just have one question. >> go ahead. >> they had the house, the senate and the presidency last year. if this is about ideology, it's not their unwillingness to cut spending, why didn't they simply pass a budget last year and we wouldn't be here talking about a cr. we'd be under paul ryan's budget. >> well, that would be terrible. now you're going to go after medicare and seniors. but the reason -- the issue was that we actually -- while we had the senate, we didn't have the 60 votes that we needed so the fact of the matter is we needed to work with republicans, and that's, as you can tell over in the senate, been a very, very difficult thing to do because of the real ideological bent that's going on. and then the house was just insufferable, quite çfrankly. >> representative grimm, is this all about planet parenthood? >> no, it's about getting serious about cutting spending.
they're still going after npr and public broadcasting. so this really has nothing to do with the numbers anymore, it's ideological from their side. >> if i could, i just have one question. >> go ahead. >> they had the house, the senate and the presidency last year. if this is about ideology, it's not their unwillingness to cut spending, why didn't they simply pass a budget last year and we wouldn't be here talking about a cr. we'd be under paul ryan's budget. >> well,...
221
221
Jun 22, 2011
06/11
by
FOXNEWS
tv
eye 221
favorite 0
quote 0
they can have a fund raidser. >> it's the same thing as like npr. why should they be entitled to have public funding? this particular case planned parenthood is still open. planned parenthood is still able to provide services including breast exams, cancer screenings, et cetera. why should the federal government be getting involved in this? it's basically social activism. let's call it what it is. why is the holder justice department involved in this? >> according to you, guilfoyle, holder and his attorneys at the justice department found a loophole with the social security act. they found a loophole, okay? so that they could go in with the resources of the justice department to try to intimidate. >> to submit. >> bill: indiana to force them to give state money to planned parenthood. >> they joined the aclu in doing so. >> bill: in the lawsuit. >> now, listen, here is why it just doesn't make any sense to me. because they carved out. >> bill: what doesn't make any sense to you? >> why they are doing this. >> bill: now you are on guilfoyle's side? yo
they can have a fund raidser. >> it's the same thing as like npr. why should they be entitled to have public funding? this particular case planned parenthood is still open. planned parenthood is still able to provide services including breast exams, cancer screenings, et cetera. why should the federal government be getting involved in this? it's basically social activism. let's call it what it is. why is the holder justice department involved in this? >> according to you, guilfoyle,...